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Book Review of Blacklist (V. I. Warshawski, Bk 11)

Blacklist (V. I. Warshawski, Bk 11)
reviewed on


This is the first book I've read by Sara Paretsky, it's written as a social commentary with a pertinent message, peopled with realistic, compelling characters, it packs a punch.

V.I. Warshowski is hired by well-heeled Darraugh Graham to investigate his 90-year old mother's complaints of nighttime prowlers on the former family estate in an ultra-posh community outside Chicago. Visiting the estate at night, VI surprises a mysterious, teenage girl and discovers the body of a black journalist at the bottom of a putrid pond. In the process of identifying both the girl and the journalist, VI confronts the sharks of Chicago's old-moneyed set, unraveling feuds, unseemly fraternization and murky misdeeds dating back to the mid 50s. Simultaneously, this same cast of characters supports a totally contemporary mystery involving a Muslim school worker with an expired visa who's all-too-easily branded a suspected terrorist.